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FCC Seeks Comment In Comcast P2P Investigation
Posted by
kdawson
on Wed Jan 16, 2008 08:46 AM
from the put-it-in-neutral dept.
from the put-it-in-neutral dept.
I Don't Believe in Imaginary Property writes "The FCC has officially opened proceedings investigating Comcast's use of Sandvine to send RST packets and 'throttle' P2P connections by disconnecting them. The petitioner, Vuze, Inc. is asking the FCC to rule that Comcast's measures do not constitute 'reasonable network management' per the FCC rules and to forbid Comcast from unreasonably discriminating against lawful Internet applications, content, and technologies. If you want to weigh in on these proceedings, you can use the Electronic Comment Filing System to comment on WC Docket no. 07-52 any time before February 13th."
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Submission: FCC Opens Comcast P2P Investigation, Seeks Comment by Anonymous Coward
[+]
P2P Fans Pound Comcast In FCC Comments 306 comments
Not Comcastic writes "Two weeks after officially opening proceedings on Comcast's BitTorrent throttling, angry users are bombarding the FCC with comments critical of the cable provider's practices. 'On numerous occasions, my access to legal BitTorrent files was cut off by Comcast,' a systems administrator based in Indianapolis wrote to the FCC shortly after the proceeding began. 'During this period, I managed to troubleshoot all other possible causes of this issue, and it was my conclusion (speaking as a competent IT administrator) that this could only be occurring due to direct action at the ISP (Comcast) level.' Another commenter writes 'I have experienced this throttling of bandwidth in sharing open-source software, e.g. Knoppix and Open Office. Also I see considerable differences in speed ftp sessions vs. html. They are obviously limiting speed in ftp as well.'"
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Your Rights Online: Comcast's New Terms of Service Disclose Traffic Management 302 comments
cremou brings us word that Comcast has changed its Terms of Service to include policies on traffic management. This comes after the FCC's recent decision to investigate Comcast's P2P throttling. The language in the updated Terms of Service, according to Ars Technica, mirrors the FCC's 2005 Internet Policy Statement[PDF].
"According to Section III of the revised ToS, Comcast 'uses reasonable network management practices that are consistent with industry standards.' The company points out that it is not alone in the practice, saying that 'all major' ISPs engage in some form of traffic shaping. Comcast does it to keep its subscribers from suffering the heartaches of 'spam, viruses, security attacks, network congestion, and other risks and degradations of service' and to 'deliver the best possible Internet experience to all of its customers.'"
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Slashdot commenting (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Slashdot commenting (Score:5, Funny)
Parent
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Don't tell me. Your provider is Concast right?
I had to ask
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Piracy HAS to go back underground. It's not an invincible jedi skill people.
What does this have to do with piracy?
As it stands, they OWN all the communication mediums we are using and they are going to be able to filter those as some point to pretty much any degree they like.
So, we justify setting them up by saying "well, since your serving the public, you can have a monopoly for this area and we'll protect your business". But then when they start crippling the services to improve their profits we just say "well, they own it so they can do anything they like". Sure, that sounds fair.
I guess at least you will have pushed the technology, but doesn't it stand that on a mass scale, the ISP, as decentralized hubs, have an extreme potential to be used against us ?
Yar - which is why we are trying to stop them from doing this
You know, if we were all rich, we probably wouldn't bother to pirate. That being the case, I think the whole public piracy concept is a bad idea. It suggests some forced socialism on any intellectual property maker or just some consumer anarchy. You know, most of the time, the public isn't exactly fair and balanced. I think we are more like children crying for attention, politician's interpret that how they what, and they impose laws to change our behavior/make things fair with corporate advice of course, ehm. It's a reaction based system. Supporting piracy openly is like declaring war on terrorism because there there is no logical victory. You can't give away people's property for them and expect that to work on a global scale without AT least watering down the quality of that product via lost profit and moral to the manufacturing market of that product.
Not sure why you are talking about piracy, here, it seems a little off-topic. But
Excellent Use of Slashdot Power (Score:5, Insightful)
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You must be n... no, that's too easy. Try reading /. at -1 from time to time, you might reconsider your above statement after that.
Re:Excellent Use of Slashdot Power (Score:4, Insightful)
Both are correct. We have some of the most well informed, and some of the biggest idiots around. I feel sorry for the FCC since the commenst section isn't moderated. No browsing at +2 for them.
Parent
Re:Excellent Use of Slashdot Power (Score:4, Insightful)
Thanks for the chuckle. You'll want to set your filter to below "+4" sometime; the vast majority of slashdotters are just as uninformed as the rest of the public -- except worse, because we don't /know/ we're just as uninformed.
Parent
If you want to weigh in on these proceedings... (Score:2)
Re: If you want to weigh in on these proceedings.. (Score:2)
amirite
Vuze Inc. = Azureus (Score:5, Informative)
Something really strange when I filled it out (Score:4, Funny)
"I am a happy Comcast customer and I love P2P blocking! In fact, I wish they would block everything! Piracy is BAD!"
Think Comcast had something to do with it?
Forging packets = questionable activity (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:Forging packets = questionable activity (Score:4, Interesting)
Parent
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Deja Vu (Score:5, Interesting)
When I though about this, though I got a sense of Deja Vu. I can't remember the particulars, but wasn't there a similar controversy back when people first started using modems over their phone lines? I seem to remember the telcos rasing a stink and saying something like "this was not what the phone lines were intended for, it's eating up too much of our resources" or something to that effect and threatening to sanction or even cut off heavy modem users. Of course, we know how that one turned out, but can you imagine what the world would look like today if they had followed through, cracking down on modem use and crippling the internet before it even got started?
Re:Deja Vu (Score:4, Interesting)
Comcast is discriminating against more than just P2P users. I'd be happy to meet their specified usage limits, if they would specify them, or use a different plan if they would define the limits of each option.
Parent
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A new pricing structure will never happen. Bandwidth is so cheap that 'normal' users would only pay $1 a month. 90gb costs me $25... Not going to happen.
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On the face of it, it seems reasonable to suggest that broadband providers actually provision their network to allow simultaneous full-speed network traffi
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Time Warner is the big (only?) cable provider in this area and after canceling their Television service they told me I could get a higher speed connection at the introduction rate for a year. Fine with me, I live in an apartment and they set up accounts by address/name so when I move in 9 months I'm under the impression that I become a n
Re:Deja Vu (Score:5, Interesting)
No, Comcast was absolutely NOT throttling.
What Comcast was doing was impersonating their customer and sending a fraud "hang up" command to the other end of the connection, and also impersonating the other end of the connection to send a fraudulent "hang up" command to their own customer, killing the connection from both ends.
US Law Computer Fraud and Abuse act [cornell.edu]
TITLE 18 PART I CHAPTER 47 Section 1030 Paragraph (a)(5)(A)(i)
[Whoever] knowingly causes the transmission of a program, information, code, or command, and as a result of such conduct, intentionally causes damage without authorization, to a protected computer;
Paragraph(a)(5)(B)(i)
loss to 1 or more persons during any 1-year period (and, for purposes of an investigation, prosecution, or other proceeding brought by the United States only, loss resulting from a related course of conduct affecting 1 or more other protected computers) aggregating at least $5,000 in value;
And where Paragraph (e)(8) defines:
the term "damage" means any impairment to the integrity or availability of data, a program, a system, or information;
Comcast was in fact knowingly transmitting fraudulent commands with the intent and effect of "impairing the availability of data", and considering that they did so to a VAST customer base it trivially exceeded an "aggregate value of $5000" even on the most conservative per-customer estimate valuation.
As far as I can Comcast hit a bullseye on an explicit criminal statute. Forget about FCC diddling over whether this was or was not "reasonable network management", as far as I can tell this should be a damn CRIMINAL case.
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And monkeys might fly out of my butt... (Score:5, Insightful)
Why, so they can ignore it again?
The public who understands it, opposes it. The rest of the public has no clue what they even asked (though would oppose it if they did). And the FCC will still side with the three comments from guys like Rupert Murdoch.
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Pretty much it. Comments without a fat check behind them are not even worth the bits they are carried on. It's should be obvous to anyone that anytime a carrier tampers with the traffic on its network in any way they should lose thier common carrier status.
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what they should lose is their DMCA safe harbour status.
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Telling Slashdot to Comment is a bad idea... (Score:3)
Slashdot users have been known to be confrontational at times, and I can't imagine that we will be doing our case any good by submitting nasty, derogatory comments to the FCC. I'm also with the conspiracy theorists that Comcast could just block the connections to that FCC page with some unfortunate "network packet loss" so keep people from submitting comments.
I guess we're screwed either way, since I doubt the FCC will do anything meaningful once Congress finishes neutering them after their "SuddenOutbreakOfCommonSense".
Re:Telling Slashdot to Comment is a bad idea... (Score:4, Informative)
The best hope to get this stopped early is for people with a large sustained user base to get the legitimate uses of bit torrent out in the open and in the public eye. Vuze, Blizzard, and Bit Torrent (obviously) have a pretty big stake in the whole thing.
Parent
Some of these comments are great! (Score:5, Funny)
Apparently the FCC is in need of purchasing some new life insurance: Submitted Comment [fcc.gov]
They also need to buy some new cell phones from Hong Kong!: Submitted Comment [fcc.gov]
Luckily, there are a few good comments such as this set of form letters (read: petition) found here: Submitted Comment [fcc.gov]
Ok, there are a few good comments there at least, I like this Rome analogy here: Submitted Comment [fcc.gov]
Hopefully, the FCC will do the right thing (Score:2)
Kevin Martin has selective attention disorder (Score:3, Insightful)
Concerned citizens = Kevin Martin hears nothing
If Kevin Martin can ignore the public outrage about relaxing media ownership rules that he witnessed personally at several town hall meetings, he'll have no trouble ignoring a bunch of public comments on the internet. He's a corporate lapdog. This Comcast "investigation" is merely a formality and a complete joke.
Cox doing the same. (Score:2, Informative)
Netscape (Score:2)
Really can we trust the FCC to get anything right? Also am I the only one who was confused by that page that is supposed to describe how to comment?
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What's that these days? $1,000? ;-)
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Re:What about other blocked traffic? (Score:4, Informative)
Parent
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As much as my friends loathe it and scream about violations of their freedoms, I think we have to live with this one as a basic spam andn worm blocking technique. It does interfere with people who want
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True, but I think it's fair to say that for anyone who actually needed to be told that, "can only" is basically true.
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I think you need to go back and work on that idea a bit more.